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> And that, in a nutshell, is why I don't really want to buy an eReader. They just seem too restrictive.

You don't have to deprive yourself of e-readers. I am completely happy with O'Reilly's and Pragmatic's policy (no DRM, multi-format). I am a little less happy with Manning, who makes it clear my book is only available for download for the 5 days following purchase. All of them offer DRM-free PDF as a minimum. I am so far very happy with my Nook (B&W e-paper version).

And there is also Feddbooks, which is conveniently linked from Stanza (I have it on my iPod)

Oh. And after the 1984 episode, it would be hard to convince me to buy a Kindle.




I am completely happy with O'Reilly's and Pragmatic's policy

I don't really need an eReader for programming books. Most of the time I'm better off reading those at the computer where I can play with the code in them. For that, I can just buy the PDF and read it in Foxit.

I'd want an eReader more for fiction, and fiction definitely still prefers DRM over non-DRM.


Other than the ability to carry a large library around with you the Kindle is pretty sucky for Programming books - the screen is too small and the formatting too limited.


The Kindle DX, on the other hand, has become indispensable to me for reading all kinds of technical books and pdfs. Along with the daily E-book deals from O'Reilly it has almost completely eliminated the need to buy paper technical books.

I think a good market for this is in areas with long, public transportation commutes. Those who take the car to work have fewer good use cases for e-readers.


It's carrying the large library around that appeals most to me. I'm attempting to solve the space issues around having many tech books around.

So far, I find the Pragmatic and O'Reilly ebooks to be pretty nice on Kindle. Code examples don't always look super. But I sometimes landscape the view (especially on pdfs) and it's much better.

But I also tend to read and hack separately anymore these days - reading to drink the bigger picture, then hack and use Google as my language reference . . .


The search, however, is unmatched by physical books.


a little less happy with Manning, who makes it clear my book is only available for download for the 5 days following purchase

You expect them to provide you with the ability to download the book any time you want, but you don't want them to ask you to pay a license fee. Sounds like you'd like the benefits of a license (someone else handles storing the media) without the tradeoff (someone else has control of the media). Doesn't seem fair to the publisher.


Supplying downloads is an easy-to-supply convenience, and it's a lot simpler to lose a digital file than a physical book. As a minor service comparison I can go to the store and get free adjustments for my glasses forever, but it's still a goods purchase.


But if you lose them they won't replace them for free.




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